Journal
PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 686-691Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1079/PHN2005888
Keywords
breast-feeding; maternity wards practice; social deprivation; growth; morbidity
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Objective To investigate what factors relate most strongly to breast-feeding duration in order to successfully support breast-feeding mothers. Design Prospective birth cohort study using questionnaires, routinely collected weights and health check at age 13 months. Setting Gateshead, UK. Subjects Parents of 923 term infants born in a defined geographical area and recruited shortly after birth, 50% of whom were breast-feeding initially. Results Only 225 (24%) infants were still breast-fed at 6 weeks, although 136 (15%) continued beyond 4 months. Infants in the most affluent quintile were three times more likely to be initially breast-fed (P < 0.001) and five times more likely to still be feeding at 4 months (P=0.001) compared with infants in the most deprived quintile. A third of breast-fed infants were given supplementary feeds in the maternity unit and this was associated with a 10-fold increase in odds of giving up breast-feeding by discharge (P=0.001). Frequent feeding was reported as a reason for giving up in 70% of mothers at 6 weeks and 55% at 4 months. Those infants who stopped breast-feeding earliest showed the most rapid weight gain and were tallest at age 13 months. Non-breast-fed infants had 50% more family doctor contacts up to age 4 months (P=0.005). Conclusions Initiation of breast-feeding in urban Britain remains strongly determined by socio-economic background and early cessation seems to be related to frequent feeding and rapid growth as well as a continuing failure to eradicate health practices that undermine breast-feeding. Those infants not receiving breast milk suffered increased morbidity, but the apparent association between breast-feeding duration and growth probably reflects reverse causation.
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